Authors: Ellen Hopkins
to meet you, Cody. We've got work to do.
PT. Also not good. I shake his hand
anyway, wait to hear the information
I need, but am absolutely sure I don't
want to know. Dr. Harrison delivers
it.
I must be perfectly honest with you.
Your life has been irreparably altered.
Great bedside manner, Doc. I swallow
hard. “What do you mean? I'm not
going to get better or what?”
You will improve some as your body
heals, and we're not even sure
what the ultimate prognosis is.
We'll need to do some tests, now that
you're conscious. What I can tell you
is the most improvement you'll see
will be within the first six months.
That said, there are lots of promising
new treatments for spinal cord injury.
And SCI researchers are very close
to tremendous breakthroughs, for
quadriplegics as well as paraâ
“Are you saying I'm paralyzed?”
No, goddamn it! It's just the drugs.
I can move, and I'll prove it. I try
as hard as I can, but no amount of
concentration makes my legs so much
as twitch. “No. You must be wrong.”
Finally, she looks directly into my eyes.
We can't tiptoe around the truth here,
Cody. Your spinal cord has been severed.
It's incomplete, so some function may
return. As I said, we'll have to run
more tests. But first, let me explain.
I know a lot more. Hell, I'm
a walking, talking SCI textbook.
Let's see. The spinal cord is a soft
bundle of nerves, traveling from
the base of the neck to the lower
back through the spinal canalâ
a tunnel in a person's backbone.
Electrical signals ping from
the brain down that pathway,
reminding body parts how
to move, or telling them to feel
pain or pleasure or whatever.
But sever the cord, or even nick
it, the communication stops
beneath the site of the injury.
Now let's get technical. She sure
as hell did. The spine has thirty-three
vertebrae, divided into regions:
cervical (neck); thoracic (upper and
middle back); lumbar (lower back);
sacrum (pelvis); and coccyx (tailbone).
There are twelve thoracic vertebrae.
The bullet struck my lower spine,
sending bone chips on an upward
trajectory. One or more dinged
my spinal cord between T(horacic)11
and T12, but didn't cut through it
completely. Still, it silenced the flow
of energy between my brain and
the body parts beneath my middle back.
Oh, but wait. This is where it really
gets good. Not only are my legs
confused, but so are my bladder
and bowel. Far fucking out. I'll be
able to piss and shit with the aid
of “specialized equipment.”
Meaning, (one) stick a tube in the end
of my penis several times a day.
And, (two) . . . well, that is just too
disgusting to think about right now.
So, yeah, once I get out of this hole,
where they've got waaaaay underpaid
orderlies to drain my dick and
massage my anus, it's giant Pampers
for me until I learn how to make
myself take a dump. Make. Myself.
Crap. I know I'm guilty of awful sins.
But do I really deserve this kind of hell?
The good doctor talks, the more
I just want to fold up and die.
But since that won't happen
right away, there's something
she hasn't told me. I need to know.
“Will I ever walk again?”
It's really too early to say. You might
be able to, aided by leg braces,
though you won't be running marathons.
It depends on how much feeling,
if any, returns. Meanwhile, your
wheelchair will be your best friend.
Wheelchair. The word slams
into my gut like a brick. I will be
confined to a wheelchair, at the mercy
of a caregiver? Someone to tell me
where to go, when to go, if I can go?
“What about driving? Can I do that?”
Absolutely, with a specially equipped
vehicle.
She smiles.
That's usually
the question I get
after
“What about sex?”
Holy shit.
Away from here, this dirty
city, where people come
in search of Lady Luck,
certain she'll guide them to
the fortune she owes them,
or
to shed their skins, reveal
the extraordinary creatures
beneath, aliens they struggle
to conceal from spouses,
ministers, their local PTA.
Will
I walk away from her?
My best friend turned lover
before our tumble from
enlightenment, if such a thing
ever belonged to me. Can
I
excise her from my heart
as easily as she deserted me?
If I opened my arms, begged
her to return, would she come
back, or would she turn and
run?
Here without herâAlex, my sweet
Alex. At least, she was sweet until
Las Vegas claimed her, made her
its bitch. This city is a pimp, selling
fantasies. For a time, Alex and I
were a fantasy duet, working for
Have Ur Cake Escort Service,
despite being a couple of years
underage. “Eighteen” isn't necessary
to participate in a business that
props up the underbelly of Vegas.
It was not what I had in mind when
I ran away, but then again, I had no
plan, and sometimes it comes down
to survival. We survived, stripping
for pay in hotel rooms, mostly
working bachelor parties, two for
the price of one. I insisted on that,
refused to do more than take off
my clothes and dance. But Alex
couldn't care less about spreading
her legs and accepting foreign objects,
as long as the dudes were willing
to pay the going rate. Then she got
greedy, started working the streets
so she wouldn't have to kick back
Lydia's commission. I found her out
there, soliciting some guy wearing
ugly purple Bermuda shorts. That
pissed me off, but in hindsight,
looking for revenge by offering to let
him buy all he could eat, double-decker,
wasn't the smartest move. Turned
out, he was a cop on a trash run, prowling
for teen hookers. Vegas has issued
stern orders: get 'em off the sidewalks,
bust their pimps and even their johns.
Detective Bermuda Shorts was only
doing his job.
Tell me who's sending
you out, the court will go easy on you.
Alex and I didn't roll on Lydia
or Have Ur Cake. Luckily, Judge
Kerry was sympathetic anyway,
an honest-to-goodness do-gooder.
Nevada considers trafficking
children a serious offense.
This is not a victimless crime,
and you, young lady, are a victim.
Made sense. How can a willing
participant be a victim? No one
tied us up at the end of the day
(although a few of our customers
offered). And we weren't trafficked,
as far as I knew then. No one kidnapped
us and smuggled us to the foreign
country of Las Vegas. Now, thanks
to my recent interaction with law
enforcement, the courts, and social
workers, I understand that three
things define trafficking: coercing
someone to turn tricks, transporting
them for that purpose, or in any
way threatening or encouraging
an underage person to sell their body.
Oh, and how good ol' Iris collected
money for allowing men to force
themselves on me? Uh, yeah. That,
too. Then, there's Have Ur Cake.
Since Alex and I haven't reached
the age of eighteenâthat magic
birthday that supposedly makes
you an adultâLydia was definitely
guilty of pandering minors for sex.
She arranged our “dates,” and
collected a hefty fee for her trouble,
so technically she was our pimp,
though we asked for the work.
She never had to twist our arms.
But she totally knew how old
we were, and that we'd run away
with a minimal bankroll. Plus,
she did, in fact, put us in her debt
by letting us stay with her when
we first arrived in Vegas. When I
appeared before Judge Kerry, though,
I didn't understand all that. “I don't see
myself as a victim, Your Honor. I was just
trying to make enough money to survive.”
He looked at me with such sadness
in his eyes.
I understand survival,
but this is not a good way to earn
money if you truly want to survive.
I don't really know
what all Alex faced
when she did outcalls
solo. She refused to talk
to me about it. I only
did a few gigs alone,
and I never exactly felt
threatened. Together,
there were a few times
when I thought a client
might hurt us, and one guy
forced Alex to jerk him off.
More than once, we got
stiffed for payment, and
then we owed Lydia
anyway. She never really
bullied us. Convinced
is more accurate. She had
a way of doing that, although
she never could talk me into
stuffing condoms into my bag
and earning a hell of a lot more
money. I'm a dancer. A stripper.
But I'll never be a whore.
Are over, at least that's what Judge
Kerry said. After my advocate
determined Gram does want me
back in Barstow, they sent me
to stay in a group home until
Gram can arrange to come pick
me up. The law says I can only
be released to a “custodial adult.”
Hey, at least I have one of those,
unlike Alex, who ended up in
a different group homeâone that
accepts pregnant teens. Pregnant.
If she got that way, it means
she wasn't using protection, and
God forbid she picked up anything
else besides sperm. The father?
Some anonymous trick, and who
knows what color the baby will
be, or what defects it might inherit
from its paternal side? So sad.
Then again, everything about Alex
makes me sadâher childhood;
the things she's allowed herself to do;
the fact I might never see her again.
Bitter, because it
was
goodbye.
Sweet, because it meant she was
safely off the streets. I spent many
hours pacing our apartment,
pining for closeness and a return
to sweet adventures in bed,
wondering when she'd come home.
If she'd come home. She always
did eventually, but every time
another little piece of the Alex
I loved was missing. Tricking chews
you up from the inside out.
We had a few minutes together
while waiting to see the judge.
“Gram says she welcomes me
back, believe it or not.”
I believe it. The one thing about
you I've always been jealous of is
how much your grandma loves you.
No one's ever loved me like that.
“What about me? I still love you,
Alex, don't want to live without
you. Please come with me. I'm
sure Gram will let you liveâ”
No. Are you kidding me?
She's got six kids to take care
of, plus your mom. You expect
her to add me and a baby?
“We can work out something.
Get jobs, our own place. I can
still help Gram with the kids,
and . . .” It sounded ridiculous.
Aw, Gin. I want you to go back
to school, get your diploma,
head off to college. You can
legit make it in the real world,
and do it all on your own. You
don't need me holding you back.
She reached out, put one hand
on my cheek. I directed it to my lips,
kissed each finger. “I don't know
what I'll do without you, and I'm
scared for you and the baby.”
Her hand fell away, never there.
Don't worry about us. We'll be
just fine. Besides . . .
She forced
her voice cold.
I've been thinking